It seems unlikely that a workaholic Wall Streeter would somehow get sick of money.

But that’s exactly the destiny — or self-realization — of former hedge-fund boss Todd Harrison, who’s now put his personal wealth to work teaching young people that money’s not everything.

In fact, dwelling on money could be harmful to leading a full life, asserts Harrison, 40, in a memoir he’s publishing online each week.

The thrust of Harrison’s mission, however, springs to life in his cartoon-driven Web site, http://www.minyanville.com, where an animated bull and bear take visitors through a land where all questions are about money.

While something of a fantasyland where reason prevails, Minyanville aims to impart some wisdom about the economy that only a Wall Street profiteer could share.

Harrison’s memoir, entitled “Memoirs of a Minyan,” offers its Chapter 9 today in which, while probing why he’s been chasing the buck so hard for most of his adult life, he discovers that his father had a criminal record.

He also tells of how the taste for glory faded as he kept piling on profits at the $400 million portfolio he ran and where he scored 40 percent gains on its benchmark.

“Still, the success was bittersweet, as nothing seemed to satiate the intense desire to lengthen our lead.”

Harrison thinks his personal growth from Minyanville is worth more than any fund can offer, despite his glory days at Morgan Stanley and Cramer Berkowitz.

“I don’t make the type of money I did on Wall Street, but the psychic income has never been higher.”